Thursday, September 29, 2016

Jesuits prepare to elect new leader

Jesuits are preparing to gather in Rome to elect a new superior general.

The general congregation meeting, the first since 2008, will begin on
October 2 with a Mass near the tomb of St Ignatius Loyola. 215 Jesuits
from around the world will be present.

They include six religious
brothers; 33 of the delegates are from the United States and Canada,
according to Jesuit Father Patrick Mulemi, director of the Jesuit
communications office in Rome.

Pope Francis is scheduled to be in Azerbaijan when the general
congregation begins, but he is expected to address the delegates
sometime during their meeting.

A committee has been working since January on a comprehensive report
on the status of the Society of Jesus, Fr Mulemi said. The report should
be presented to the general congregation on October 3.

The current superior, Father Adolfo Nicolas, announced in 2014 that
he would tender his resignation this year after more than eight years in
office. He turned 80 in April.

After members of the general congregation discuss the status
report, they will be asked to accept Fr Nicolas’s resignation, which
they are expected to do even though the superior general of the Jesuits
is elected for life.

In an interview published in July by the Jesuit headquarters, Fr
Nicolas said the congregation is free to accept or reject his
resignation request.

But “we need agility and daring in facing the
future,” and if the delegates insist he remain superior general, they
“will have to elect a vicar to provide for the coming years in which my
abilities will certainly be greatly diminished, a process that I am
already beginning to feel at present.”

The process of electing a new superior will begin sometime after the presentation and discussion of the status report.

The congregation members themselves determine the schedule for the
meeting. Other than the opening Mass and initial presentation of the
status report, “there is no set date for the rest of the business,”
Father Mulemi said, and “there is no way of knowing when it will end.”

As of January 1, the total number of Jesuits in the world was 16,376:
11,785 priests, 1,192 brothers, 2,681 scholastics and 718 novices — a
net loss of 351 members from the previous year, Father Mulemi said.

The average age of the 215 Jesuits participating in the general
congregation is 56 years, he said. The oldest member of the body will be
Father Nicolas, and the youngest is Jesuit Brother James Edema from the
Eastern Africa province, who is 39.

In an interview with the Italian Jesuit journal, La Civilta
Cattolica, Father Nicolas said he hoped the general congregation not
only would elect a good superior, but would make decisions and set
policies that would result in “a better religious life in the spirit of
the Gospel and a renewed capacity for imagination.”

Fr Nicolas said that “times have changed” since the last general
congregation. “We need boldness, creativity and courage to face our
mission as part of the greater mission of God in the world.”

Jesuits and members of other religious orders, he said, have a great
desire to respond with generosity to the challenges people face today.

The Society of Jesus is the largest religious order of men. They are
followed by the Salesians, the Franciscans, the Capuchins and the
Benedictines.